Crown Ground
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Location in Hyndburn
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Former names | Fraser Eagle Stadium Interlink Express Stadium |
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Location | Livingstone Road, Accrington, Lancashire, England |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Capacity | 5,057 (2,000 seated) |
Field size | 111 by 72 yards (101 m × 66 m) |
Construction | |
Built | 1968 |
Opened | 1968 |
Tenants | |
Accrington Stanley F.C. (1968–present) |
The Crown Ground is a multi-use stadium in Accrington, Lancashire, England. It is currently called the Wham Stadium as part of a three-year £200,000 sponsorship deal with What More UK Ltd.[1] It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of Accrington Stanley. The stadium holds 5,057 and was built in 1968. It was the smallest stadium in the Football League in the 2010–11 season; however, it lost this status to newly promoted Crawley Town's Broadfield Stadium.
Previous names
The stadium was named the Fraser Eagle Stadium for sponsorship purposes until the demise of local company Fraser Eagle in 2009. Before that it was named the Interlink Express Stadium.
Stands/terraces
- The Jack Barret Memorial Stand: this stand is the newest stand. A terrace used to be in its place until it was knocked down and replaced by the current one whilst Stanley were still in the Northern Premier League. It runs half the length of the pitch. The dugouts are situated here and in the John Smiths Stand.
- John Smiths Stand: this stand runs the other half the length of the pitch. It used to be called the Thwaites Stand. Because of the slope on the pitch it has fewer rows of seating the nearer you get to the Clayton End.
- Clayton End: officially called the Sophia Khan Stand. This the home end. The more vocal Stanley fans known as the Stanley Ultras like to stand here. It is a covered terrace that had a roof added to it at the start of 2007–08. Seats were added to the front half of the terrace to bring the stadium up to Football League standards.
- Whinney Hill Terrace: otherwise known as the Cowshed. It stands on the lower slopes of Whinney Hill which is home to a vast waste infill site. It was a small terrace with only 3 rows but had seating installed in the covered section to bring the stadium up to Football League standards. It has a roof running two thirds pf the length of the pitch held up by pillars. The terrace continues around the corner for about a third of the Coppice End and around the corner at the other end to join with the Clayton End. The television gantry is situated in the middle of the terrace. The half nearest the Coppice End is given to away fans.
- Coppice End: this is the away end. This runs two thirds of the width of the pitch; if the away club brings a small number of fans the terrace is unused.
External links
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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